Treaty of Prague (1973)
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This article is part of the series: Territorial changes of Germany |
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Background |
German settlement in Eastern Europe |
Unification of Germany |
World War I |
Treaty of Versailles |
Silesian Uprisings |
Polish corridor |
Interbellum |
Return of the Saar region |
Rhineland Remilitarization |
Anschluss (Austria) |
Munich Agreement |
World War II |
Großdeutschland |
Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany |
Yalta Conference |
Potsdam Conference |
Post-World War II |
Former eastern territories of Germany |
Territorial changes & Oder-Neisse line |
Treaty of Zgorzelec (1950) |
Treaty of Warsaw (1970) |
Treaty of Prague (1973) |
2+4 Treaty (1990) |
German-Polish Border Treaty (1990) |
See also |
Territorial changes of Poland |
Recovered Territories |
The Treaty of Prague was a treaty signed on 11 December 1973, in Prague, by the Federal Republic of Germany and Czechoslovakia in which the two States recognised each other diplomatically and declared the 1938 Munich Agreements to be null and void by acknowledging the inviolability of their common borders and abandoning all territorial claims.[1]
- ^ United States-Department of State. Documents on Germany 1944-1985. Washington: Department of State, [s.d.], pp. 1256-1258.